In the first poll released since they became the nominees of their respective parties, Democratic candidate Bill de Blasio has a huge lead over his Republican opponent Joe Lhota in New York City’s mayoral race.
Likely voters favor de Blasio by 43 points in the race for New York City mayor according to the NBC/WSJ Marist poll, a positive sign for those hoping to elect the first Democratic mayor since David Dinkins was defeated by Rudy Giuliani in 1993. Barring a major shift in the campaign, Lhota has a relatively small pool of undecided voters from which to cull more votes. All told, only 9% of likely voters said they had made no choice in the race, while nearly two in three voters named de Blasio as their preferred candidate, only 1 in 5 named Lhota.
While he has received criticism that his campaign focus on “two New Yorks” and the inequalities in the city is “divisive,” de Blasio also enjoys even support across income levels in the poll. Exactly 66% of those making both more than $50,000 a year and less than $50,000 a year support his campaign. Lhota enjoys a slight bump among those making more than $50,000.
De Blasio enjoys strong support from minority voters as well, with an 83-point lead over Lhota with African American voters and a 63-point lead among Hispanic voters. He even holds a 13-point lead over Lhota with white voters.
Lhota holds a lead with only three groups of voters. Republicans, who favor him by a 38-point margin, self-described conservatives, who favor him by 2 points, and white Catholics, who favor him by 5 points.
De Blasio’s weakest leads are in Queens and Staten Island, where he still enjoys a 32-point lead over his opponent, although 12% of voters say they’re undecided.









